Rise of the Horde - Chapter 578 - 578

The council chamber deep beneath the Arass manor had not seen daylight in thirty years. It existed in permanent twilight, illuminated by candles that burned with that characteristic purple flame that marked the family’s particular brand of dark arts. The table at the chamber’s center was ancient ebony, its surface carved with sigils that seemed to writhe and shift when viewed from the corner of one’s eye.
Around this table sat the five individuals who truly controlled what remained of House Arass.
Lord Marius Arass occupied the seat of authority at the table’s head, his gaunt face illuminated from below by the candles, creating shadows that made him look like a corpse that had learned to speak. To his right sat his cousin Elena, her dark hair pulled back so severely it seemed to stretch the skin of her face. To his left was Lady Corvina, the eldest, her white hair like spider silk in the dim light, her ancient eyes still sharp with malice.
Across from Marius sat Adrian Arass, master of their hidden academy, his scholar’s robes stained with substances better left unidentified. And finally, at the far end of the table, sat Severus the Master of Coin, the only member of the conspiracy who held an official position at court. His portly frame and jovial face were a stark contrast to the others’ predatory appearances, but his eyes held the same cold calculation.
Before them, spread across the table, lay two dozen intercepted messages. Ravens that had never reached their destinations. Desperate pleas that had died in darkness.
Marius held up two scrolls, one in each hand.
“These,” he said quietly, “change everything.”
He set the scrolls down carefully, positioning them so all could see. “The first is from Countess Winters. The second from General Snowe. Both were intercepted this morning by our watchers. Both say essentially the same thing.”
Elena leaned forward, her fingers steepled. “Let me guess. Threats of withdrawal?”
“More than threats,” Marius replied. “Ultimatums. Both commanders state explicitly that without reinforcements or resupply within one week, they will have no choice but to retreat to Threian territory and demand an audience with the crown to explain why they were abandoned.”
Silence fell over the chamber. The implications were clear to everyone present.
Lady Corvina was the first to speak, her raspy voice cutting through the quiet. “If they withdraw now, everything we’ve worked for collapses. Two different armies returning to the capital, their commanders demanding answers… the king would have to investigate. Our control of information would be exposed.”
“Worse,” Adrian added, adjusting his spectacles. “The Winters and Snowe families would unite in their outrage. All their old feuds would be forgotten in the face of this betrayal. Instead of destroying them, we’d have made them allies against a common enemy. Against us.”
“And we’re not ready for that,” Severus said, his usually jovial tone absent. “The court is mostly under our influence, yes, but not completely. If the Winters and Snowe present a united front, with two armies at their backs, demanding to know why their messages were never answered…” He shook his head. “We’d be finished. Exposed. Probably executed.”
Marius nodded slowly. “Exactly. Which means we cannot allow them to withdraw. Not now. Not when they’re so close to being destroyed.”
“But how do we stop them?” Elena asked. “We can’t intercept these messages. They’re ultimatums. If the king doesn’t respond, they’ll retreat regardless. And if they retreat…”
“Then we give them what they want,” Marius said simply.
The others stared at him in confusion.
“Explain,” Lady Corvina demanded.
Marius stood, beginning to pace around the table as he spoke, his mind clearly working through the problem.
“We’ve been playing a delicate game. Keep them isolated, starve them of support, let the orcs bleed them dry. But we’ve pushed too far, too fast. They’re not bleeding to death… they’re preparing to amputate the limb and retreat.”
He stopped, placing both hands on the table and leaning forward.
“So we adjust. We let these messages through to the king. We allow him to see that his commanders are in dire straits and need immediate support. We let the crown respond with reinforcements and supplies.”
“That defeats the entire purpose!” Adrian protested. “If they’re reinforced and resupplied, they’ll hold indefinitely!”
“No,” Marius said, a cold smile crossing his face. “Not if we control what reinforcements they receive. Not if we alter the messages to hide the true extent of their desperation.”
Understanding began to dawn on Elena’s face. “You want to rewrite the messages.”
“Precisely,” Marius confirmed. “Look at what they’ve actually written. The Countess demands reinforcements, supplies, acknowledgment of her dire situation. Snowe does the same. Both paint pictures of armies on the brink of collapse, facing overwhelming odds, desperate for massive support.”
He picked up the Winters message, holding it to the light.
“But what if the king receives a different message? One that says… yes, we need supplies and some reinforcements, but the situation is stable. We’re holding the orcs back successfully. Minor casualties. No immediate crisis. Just routine resupply and rotation of troops.”
Severus leaned back in his chair, a slow smile spreading across his round face. “The king would send token support. Enough to technically fulfill the request, but nowhere near what they actually need.”
“Exactly,” Marius said. “A few hundred extra soldiers. Some wagons of supplies. Enough to keep them in the field, enough to prevent them from feeling justified in retreating… but not enough to actually change their strategic situation.”
“And they’ll accept it,” Elena added, seeing the brilliance of the plan. “Because they’ll think the crown simply doesn’t understand how desperate things really are. They’ll assume their messages downplayed the crisis to avoid appearing weak.”
“They’ll stay,” Lady Corvina said, her ancient face splitting into a predatory grin. “They’ll stay and keep fighting. And the orcs will keep attacking. And slowly, inevitably, they’ll be ground down.”
“But there’s risk,” Adrian cautioned. “Altering royal messages is dangerous. If we’re caught…”
“We’re already altering royal correspondence,” Elena pointed out. “We’ve been intercepting and destroying messages for weeks. This is just… a refinement of the process. Instead of destroying, we edit.”
Marius returned to his seat, his expression serious. “The alternative is exposure and execution. If they retreat now, our conspiracy is revealed. We have no choice but to take this risk.”
He looked around the table, meeting each person’s eyes in turn.
“Here’s how we proceed. Severus, you’ll craft the altered messages. Keep the basic structure… requests for supplies and reinforcements… but remove all references to desperate circumstances, heavy casualties, or immediate crisis. Make them sound like routine status reports with minor requests.”
Severus nodded. “I can do that. The king’s seen enough military reports to know the format. I’ll make them believable.”
“Elena,” Marius continued, “you’ll ensure the messages reach the king. No more interceptions. Let them through. Make it seem like they simply took longer than usual due to… weather, or bird deaths, or whatever excuse seems plausible.”
“Understood,” Elena replied. “I’ll coordinate with our watchers. The ravens will reach the capital within two days.”
“Good. Severus, once the king receives the messages, you’ll guide his response. Suggest a moderate resupply effort. Nothing excessive. Perhaps… five thousand soldiers for each army? Enough to seem like the crown is taking their requests seriously, not enough to actually matter.”
“Five thousand fresh troops won’t change anything,” Severus agreed. “Not against the numbers they’re facing. It’ll buy them maybe a week of extra endurance. Two at most.”
“And supplies?” Lady Corvina asked. “What about food and arrows and such?”
“Enough for a month,” Marius decided. “Delivered slowly, in small caravans rather than one large convoy. That way, if the orcs intercept some of it, the losses seem like bad luck rather than conspiracy.”
He picked up a quill and parchment, beginning to sketch out the details.
“The key is balance. We need to give them just enough to prevent retreat, but not enough to ensure survival. Keep them fighting. Keep them in the field. And most importantly…” He looked up, his eyes cold. “Keep them ignorant of how thoroughly they’ve been betrayed.”
Adrian cleared his throat. “There’s another consideration. What if they compare notes? The Winters and Snowe commanders, I mean. If they communicate with each other and realize they both sent desperate messages but received only token support…”
“They won’t,” Elena said confidently. “The two families hate each other. That’s been consistent for three generations. Neither commander would risk appearing weak to their rival by admitting how desperate their situation truly is.”
“Pride will keep them isolated,” Severus agreed. “Each will assume they’re handling the situation better than the other. Each will be too proud to admit they’re struggling.”
Marius nodded. “Their feud is our greatest asset in this. It ensures they’ll never unite against us until it’s far too late.”
He set down the quill and looked around the table once more.
“Let me be absolutely clear about what we’re doing here. We’re not just intercepting messages anymore. We’re actively manipulating the crown’s response to a military crisis. We’re sending armies into the field with insufficient support while making them believe help is coming. If this is discovered, it won’t be mere exile. It will be executions. Public ones. Painful ones.”
He paused, letting the weight of his words sink in.
“Is everyone still committed to this course?”
Lady Corvina spoke first, her voice hard as stone. “The Church burned my siblings alive while I watched. The Winters family held the torches. The Snowe family provided the guards. I will see them destroyed if it takes my last breath. I’m committed.”
“The crown took everything from us,” Elena added. “Our wealth, our status, our very name became a curse. Now we take everything from them. I’m committed.”
“They branded us as dark practitioners,” Adrian said quietly. “Destroyed our libraries, killed our scholars, set back magical research by a century. All because we sought knowledge they deemed forbidden. I’m committed.”
Severus was last. He took a long moment before speaking, his jovial mask completely gone.
“I was ten years old when they purged the Arass family. My father served as your house’s accountant. Not a practitioner. Not a scholar. Just a man who kept your books. They killed him anyway. Threw him in prison and let him rot there until disease took him.” His hands clenched into fists. “I’m committed. To the very end.”
Marius nodded slowly. “Then we’re agreed. We proceed with the plan. Severus begins drafting the altered messages tonight. Elena arranges for their delivery tomorrow. I’ll coordinate with our other agents to ensure the crown’s response is… appropriately limited.”
He stood, and the others rose with him.
“One more thing,” Lady Corvina said. “What about contingencies? If somehow they do survive despite our efforts?”
Marius smiled coldly. “We have assets in place. The four soldiers we’ve been… conditioning… in the lower chambers. Once they’re fully converted, we can deploy them as infiltrators. Saboteurs. Assassins if necessary.”
“How long until they’re ready?” Elena asked.
“Captain Baldred still resists,” Marius admitted. “His will is… remarkable. But the others are nearly complete. Another week, perhaps two, and we’ll have three perfect puppets ready to deploy. The captain will break eventually. They always do.”
“And if they break sooner than expected?” Adrian asked. “If the armies collapse before our infiltrators are ready?”
“Then we ensure no one survives to tell the tale,” Marius said flatly. “Our agents can arrange… accidents. Ambushes. Ensure that any retreat becomes a rout. That any survivors are too traumatized and broken to piece together what happened to them.”
He moved to a side table where a map of the kingdom was spread out. The northern territories were marked with various symbols denoting troop positions, supply routes, and strategic points.
“Look at this,” he said, gesturing to the map. “Two of the kingdom’s proudest noble houses, isolated in hostile territory. Cut off from support. Facing an enemy that grows stronger daily. And they have no idea… no idea at all… that their real enemy isn’t the orcs.”
He placed a marker on the Winters position, then another on the Snowe encampment.
“It’s us. It’s been us all along. We’re the ones killing them. Not quickly, not dramatically, but slowly. Methodically. Death by a thousand cuts, each one designed to look like misfortune or bureaucratic incompetence.”
Elena joined him at the map, her finger tracing the supply routes. “When the reinforcements arrive… token as they’ll be… the commanders will think the crown simply didn’t understand the urgency. They’ll blame poor communication, not conspiracy.”
“And when they finally fall,” Severus added, “the crown will blame them. Poor leadership. Overextension. Tactical mistakes. The king will never know he was fed false information. He’ll never know his own Master of Coin orchestrated their destruction.”
“Perfect,” Lady Corvina breathed. “Absolutely perfect. They die believing they were simply unlucky. The crown believes it was a tragic military failure. And we…”
“We step into the vacuum,” Marius finished. “Loyal. Competent. Ready to serve. The Arass family, reborn from the ashes of our enemies’ destruction.”
He turned back to face the council.
“We have our assignments. Severus, begin drafting immediately. I want to see the altered messages before dawn. Elena, coordinate with the watchers. Those ravens need to reach the capital by tomorrow evening at the latest. Adrian, continue preparing our students. We may need them sooner than expected.”
“And you, my lord?” Lady Corvina asked.
“I’ll visit our guests in the lower chambers. See how their conditioning progresses. And perhaps…” His smile was terrible to behold. “Perhaps have a conversation with Captain Baldred. See if I can’t… encourage… his cooperation.”
The council members moved to depart, but Marius raised a hand, stopping them.
“One final thing. Remember always why we do this. Not for power alone, though that will be sweet. Not for revenge alone, though that will be satisfying. We do this because they tried to destroy us and failed. Because we endured when we should have perished. Because we learned patience when they expected us to lash out.”
He placed both hands flat on the table, his voice dropping to barely above a whisper.
“Thirty years. Thirty years of hiding. Of planning. Of placing our people in positions where they could serve our purposes. Thirty years of watching our enemies grow fat and complacent while we sharpened our knives in darkness.”
His voice rose, filled with cold passion.
“Now… finally… those knives find throats. The Winters and Snowe families will fall. Their armies will be destroyed. Their heirs will be left weakened and dependent on our ‘generous’ support. And from their ashes, House Arass will rise again. Not as dark practitioners to be feared and purged, but as loyal servants who saved the kingdom in its hour of need.”
He straightened, his expression settling back into cold calculation.
“Go. Do your work. Execute the plan flawlessly. And in a month, perhaps two, we’ll gather here again to celebrate the complete destruction of everyone who wronged us.”
The council dispersed, each member departing to their assigned tasks. Within moments, Marius stood alone in the chamber, surrounded by the intercepted messages of desperate commanders who had no idea their pleas for help were being transformed into tools of their own destruction.
He picked up the Winters message again, reading the countess’s carefully worded desperation. Then the Snowe message, seeing the general’s barely concealed panic.
“So close to breaking,” he murmured to the empty room. “So very close. Just a little more pressure. Just a little more manipulation. And then…”
He let the scrolls fall to the table.
“And then you’ll understand what it means to be betrayed by those you trusted. To be abandoned when you need help most. To die slowly, painfully, while believing salvation is just around the corner.”
His laughter echoed through the chamber, soft and terrible.
“Welcome to our world, Countess. Welcome to our world, General. May you suffer every moment we suffered. And more.”
The candles flickered, their purple flames dancing in response to words spoken with such concentrated hatred.
And in the darkness beneath the Arass manor, the machinery of betrayal turned another revolution, grinding heroes into dust while they still believed help was coming.
It was, perhaps, the cruelest mercy of all.
Hope, carefully measured and delivered, just enough to keep them fighting.
Just enough to ensure their doom.


